Reengineering Engineering
After seven years, Northeastern's Center for Subsurface Sensing
and Imaging Systems has a new name and two new missions -- affirming
the D in R&D, and teaching talented engineers to become skilled
leaders.
By Karen Feldscher
Since 2000, Northeastern’s Center for Subsurface
Sensing and Imaging Systems (CenSSIS) has been figuring out the
best ways to locate all kinds of hard-to-find things: malignant
tumors, land mines, roaming schools of fish. To accomplish this
high-tech sleuthing, center researchers combine and leverage their
expertise in optics, ultrasound, radar, sonar, signal processing,
and computational science.
Last year, the work got even more exciting. CenSSIS
was awarded a $20 million gift, given by the foundation established
by entrepreneur Bernard M. Gordon—who started the technology
firms Analogic and NeuroLogica—and his wife, Sophia.
The gift changed the name of the center, which is
now the Gordon Center for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems.
And it’s allowing the trailblazing outfit to expand even further
into uncharted territory.
Two goals are uppermost. Along with continuing its
scientific and technological research, the center is going to develop
strong academic-industrial partnerships capable of quickly launching
new products and systems into the marketplace.
Perhaps even more exciting, the center will seek
to become the nation’s number-one training spot for engineering
leaders. “There are not enough engineers who can complete
projects on a timely, and economic, and technically successful basis,”
says Gordon. “Northeastern officials are committed to changing
this.”
The Gordon Center’s new goals, says director
Michael Silevitch, E’65, ME’66, PHD’71, address
a weighty concern: The United States may be close to losing its
technological edge in the world.
“We are grappling with a major national problem,”
says Silevitch, who started CenSSIS with roughly $16 million, awarded
to Northeastern and its partners.
“Our children aren’t being guided into
math and science careers,” he says. “They’re being
vectored into fields that are purported to be more lucrative, like
law and finance. As a result, we’re becoming a country that
is not innovating. In forty years, are we going to see the United
States take a back seat in terms of technological leadership globally?”
By aiming research more squarely at practical applications,
fostering working partnerships with a variety of companies, and
producing farsighted engineering leaders, Silevitch believes his
center can energize U.S. technological innovation, and not a moment
too soon.
The center’s new real-world, leadership-oriented
approach is stirring up enthusiasm from observers, Silevitch says.
“We’re getting very strong vibes from
both industry and government that this is the thing to do.”
The gathering storm
In October 2005, a National Academies committee on science, engineering,
and public policy produced a report titled “Rising above the
Gathering Storm: Energizing and Employing America for a Brighter
Economic Future,” which examined what needs to happen to keep
American science and technology second to none.
Increasingly, the American workforce competes for
technological jobs with lower-wage workers around the globe. Likewise,
leading-edge scientific and engineering advances are happening all
over the world. This strengthening of science and technology output
overseas is good for the planet, the report says. But it may not
be so good for the United States.
America, the report urges, must act to “preserve
its strategic and economic security.” Its authors write, “We
fear the abruptness with which a lead in science and technology
can be lost and the difficulty of recovering a lead once lost—if
indeed it can be regained at all.”
The solution? “The United States must compete
by optimizing its knowledge-based resources,” the report says,
“particularly in science and technology, and by sustaining
the most fertile environment for new and revitalized industries
and the well-paying jobs they bring.”
Silevitch and his colleagues and industrial partners
are convinced the Gordon Center can be one of these fertile environments.
Partners like Lianne Ing, for instance. Ing is the
vice president of business development at Canada’s Bubble
Technology Industries, located in Chalk River, Ontario. Bubble worked
with Northeastern researchers to develop an “advanced spectroscopic
portal,” or ASP—a tollbooth-like device that can detect
radiation at airports, seaports, or border crossings.
Speaking at a CenSSIS conference last fall, Ing
explained that present-day technological ventures “really
need multipartner teams.” It’s increasingly rare, she
said, to have one company “do it all” when it comes
to bringing a product to market.
“We think the Gordon program can really make
a difference to industry,” she said.
And if new technologies are created by partnerships,
the partnerships must be led by hard-driving visionaries.
Lynn Preston, who directs the National Science Foundation’s
Engineering Research Center (ERC) program, which provided the initial
funding for CenSSIS, says, “The ERC program and CenSSIS are
dedicated to developing engineering leaders who understand how to
take on high-risk technological opportunities and work with industry
to speed their entry into the marketplace.”
Into “the rough and tumble”
In its new incarnation, the Gordon Center will pursue many more
high-risk technological opportunities like the ASP project.
Actually, the idea of moving CenSSIS from a “research
center” to a “research and development center”
was prompted by the successful development of the ASP, which is
currently in production at Raytheon under a $28 million contract
awarded last July by the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.
About four years ago, Bubble asked CenSSIS officials
if they’d be interested in collaborating on a new system for
detecting hidden radioactive materials. The impetus for such a system
came directly from Homeland Security, which was looking for a way
to prevent the smuggling of dirty-bomb components into the United
States. A new kind of radiation detector was needed, one that could,
for example, detect radioactive components hidden inside trucks,
railcars, or shipping containers (see sidebar, this page).
Though Bubble had the technological know-how to
create the ASP, it had no experience working for a U.S. government
agency. It wanted CenSSIS to handle program management for the effort.
Bubble and CenSSIS bid the proposal together, telling Homeland Security
it would take three years to complete.
But Homeland Security liked the idea so much, it
requested the work be done in a scant nine months. Thus began CenSSIS’s
first foray into what Silevitch calls “the rough and tumble”
of the industrial arena.
“The challenge,” says Silevitch, “was
to take the project from a fairly leisurely advanced research assessment
to an actual product development and delivery over a nine-month
period, which was quite a different ballgame.”
With the help of two industry pros hired in 2002
and 2003—Philip Cheney, a four-decade Raytheon veteran who
spent eleven years as the company’s vice president of engineering,
and John Beaty, who’d worked for a number of Boston-area high-tech
companies as a program manager—CenSSIS and Bubble completed
the effort on time.
Now the Gordon Center is working on several other
projects designed to help America stay safe from terrorist attacks.
For instance, it’s working with companies
to develop a suicide-bomber detection system (see sidebar, page
35), as well as an acoustic system that detects dangerous machinery
inside buildings.
According to Silevitch, Bernard Gordon took notice
of the ASP success. Gordon, Silevitch says, was impressed with “the
fact that we in the academic domain could take a project that had
high priority, high impact, and very stringent deliverables, and
oversee the completion of that project on time, so it could be passed
into a production contract worth many times that of the $5 million
investment the government made.
“Seeing that we actually did something that
any industry would have been proud to have done gave him the confidence
that we at least had the right mindset,” says Silevitch. Gordon
was impressed enough to give his multimillion-dollar donation to,
in part, help CenSSIS become a research and development center.
Silevitch calls the Gordon gift “transformational.”
President Aoun also lauds the gift, explaining that “turning
promising academic research into technologies that address real-world
problems is among the foremost responsibilities of a research university.”
Aoun is describing what’s known in scholarly
circles as translational research—shaping basic research into
practical applications. In other words, making sure the R in “research”
is closely linked to the D in “development.”
High-speed leadership education
In addition to creating a premier R&D center, the Gordon gift
will build a top-flight training ground for a new generation of
engineering leaders.
The graduate-level Gordon Engineering Leadership
Program, culminating in a master’s degree, will begin
at Northeastern this fall. Its students, known as Gordon fellows,
will face rigorous hurdles, program officials say. For example,
each fellow will be required to complete a “challenge project”
with clear deliverables.
“The projects will stress the person well
beyond their comfort zone,” promises Silevitch. But that’s
the whole idea: Students will experience the real-world process
of bringing a technological innovation to market in a relatively
short period of time.
Each fellow, supported by industrial and academic
mentors, will lead a team that conducts a complex engineering project
from conception to completion. Projects will stem either from emerging
technologies produced by CenSSIS research or from industry-sponsored
initiatives. Each project must result in the creation of a viable
product for either commercial or government use.
“The challenge project, the most vital portion
of the program, will really test the students’ mettle,”
says Beaty.
Gordon fellows will be drawn from industry and government
agencies, and from undergraduate and graduate engineering programs.
They will take two core courses: scientific foundations of engineering,
and fundamentals of engineering leadership.
The foundations course is meant to give students
a framework with which to develop strategies for assessing product
development. “The idea,” says Silevitch, “is that
when you’re presented with a new concept and you need to do
a rapid assessment, you will be able to make a quick calculation
and come up with a judgment as to whether the concept makes sense.”
Officials hope the engineering leadership course
will help speed the process of training engineering leaders.
“Usually, finding the next generation of engineering
leaders takes a fair amount of time,” says Cheney.
Beaty agrees. “In industry, typically by the
third year a person is in a company, you can tell if that person
has leadership capability. Then you give those people additional
responsibility. All told, the process could take about ten years
before people have sufficient experience so that you hand off a
project to them. This program is meant to shorten that time frame
to about five years.”
While they’re still in school, Gordon fellows
will learn the tricks of the engineering-management trade: monitoring
the technical progress of a project, overseeing expenses, handling
interpersonal issues, and assessing risk.
Gordon Center associate director Carey Rappaport
admits that companies and organizations might be skeptical about
signing their workers up for an engineering leadership program that
could take from one to two years to complete, when those workers
could be trained in-house instead.
“By [training them] at a university, though,”
Rappaport says, “they will get faculty input and be able to
toss over ideas with other students. They’ll get the benefit
of working with top researchers who can bring their brain power
to help solve tough problems.
“They’ll get the advantage of being
in a community of thinkers,” he says.
Changing the culture
Silevitch expects the Gordon Center’s emphasis on engineering
leadership will filter throughout the entire College of Engineering.
“We hope this will create opportunities for those in other
engineering disciplines besides just sensing and imaging,”
he says.
He also envisions creating leadership pathways not
just for graduate students, but for high-school seniors and freshmen.
In fact, he is creating an engineering-leadership
feeder program that will offer awards to thirty freshmen next year.
They will take specialized courses in leadership their freshman
year and, in subsequent years, learn about leading both from Gordon
Center mentors and from co-op jobs that hone their leadership abilities.
If all goes according to plan, each of these students
will have earned a patent by the end of their undergraduate years.
“If they can do this,” says Silevitch, “they would
be almost a slam-dunk into the Gordon Leadership Program.”
Though the Gordon Center’s new focus on academic-industrial
partnerships working toward specific products is a clear departure
from the center’s genesis as a research center, officials
believe the change will benefit companies, government agencies,
and, of course, Northeastern.
“The basis of engineering is to make things,”
says Rappaport. “On the other hand, not everybody can reduce
ideas to practice and make money out of it.”
None of the center’s officials dismisses the
importance of so-called pure research. “Doctoral research
to create new concepts is really tougher than developing a product
for the marketplace,” Rappaport says. “Still, I think
the two kinds of education—academic and practical—are
not mutually exclusive.
“This new program institutes a graduate-level
practical research piece, in addition to pure research,” he
says. “Ideally, a university should do both.”
Silevitch agrees. “Our goal is to change the
culture, change the mentality. We don’t want to short-shrift
the basic research. But we have to restrike the balance between
basic research and research that applies to the real world.”
Karen Feldscher is a senior writer.
The Couple Behind The Gift
A 1986 National Medal of Technology recipient,
Bernard M. Gordon has led an accomplished technical career, culminating
with his roles as founder and chairman of Analogic, and cofounder
and executive chairman of NeuroLogica. He and his teams have been
responsible for dozens of engineering milestones, with several hundred
patents worldwide.
Through their establishment of the Gordon Foundation,
Gordon and his wife, Sophia, have distributed more than $100 million
since the early 1990s, much of it to train outstanding engineers
and scientists, and to support educational and medical initiatives.
The Truck Stops Here
Detecting deadly radiation is nothing new.
But detecting concealed radioactive materials, which
may be hidden inside benign materials that contain small amounts
of naturally occurring radiation, is something else entirely.
That’s why the Gordon Center for Subsurface
Sensing and Imaging Systems worked for several years alongside Canada’s
Bubble Technology Industries, at the request of the U.S. Department
of Homeland Security, to develop a system—called an advanced
spectroscopic portal, or ASP—that can detect radioactive materials
hidden inside trucks, railcars, or shipping containers.
Current radiation detectors can’t tell the
difference between troublesome and benign types of radiation, says
Lianne Ing, Bubble’s vice president of business development.
And that’s a problem, because a host of everyday products
contain trace amounts of radiation that can trigger false alarms—products
like bananas, ceramic tiles, kitty litter, medical isotopes, and
fertilizer.
The ASP, Ing explains, “can detect the difference
between bananas and dirty bombs”—not as easy as you
might think—or detect a chunk of uranium hidden inside a tub
of fertilizer. It does so by measuring energy, which is then converted
into electronic signals. By examining the signals, engineers are
able to differentiate between the hazardous and the benign radioactive
signatures.
This device, said to resemble a tollbooth, is currently
in production at Raytheon.
— Karen Feldscher
Did you know?
Interesting facts about the Bernard M. Gordon Center
for Subsurface Sensing and Imaging Systems
WHAT IT IS: A multi-university, multi-industry National
Science Foundation Engineering Research Center (NSF-ERC), founded
in 2000. One of only three NSF-ERCs in New England in 2000; one
of forty-three funded nationwide since 1984.
WHAT IT DOES: Develops new technologies to detect
hidden objects such as tumors, buried land mines, roaming schools
of fish, underground pollution, and concealed radioactive materials.
HOW IT SOLVES PROBLEMS: Using a high-level systems
approach that combines expertise in wave physics (photonics, ultrasonics,
and electromagnetics), multisensor fusion, image processing, and
3-D CAT scan–like reconstruction and visualization.
HOW IT OPERATES: With the speed and agility more
typical of a results-driven private company than of an academic
institution, which allows it to meet the needs of its industrial
and government partners.
HOW STUDENTS BENEFIT: The center’s K–12,
undergraduate, and graduate programs are transforming engineering
education and developing the next generation of engineering leaders.
HOW THE UNITED STATES BENEFITS: Effective academic-industrial
partnerships are launching new systems and products into the high-tech
marketplace.
ACADEMIC PARTNERS: Boston University, Rensselaer
Polytechnic Institute, and the University of Puerto Rico at Mayagüez.
CORE STRATEGIC AFFILIATES: Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory, Massachusetts General Hospital, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution, and Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center.
STRATEGIC INDUSTRIAL PARTNERS: Raytheon, Textron
Defense Systems, Siemens Global Research.
SINCE 2000: Sixteen industrial partners. $30 million
in NSF funding. $7 million in corporate funding. $10 million in
research contracts. Twenty Northeastern faculty researchers. One
hundred Northeastern student researchers.
DIRECTOR: Michael Silevitch, the Robert D. Black
Professor of Engineering. He’s a triple Husky: E’65,
ME’66, PHD’71.
YEARS PURSUINING INITIAL ERC DESIGNATION: Four.
2006 HIGHLIGHT: The Gordon Foundation’s $20
million gift establishes the Gordon Engineering Leadership Program
and will support CenSSIS operations beyond 2010.
ENGINEERING FUNDING: In FY05, Northeastern was awarded
more NSF funds for engineering research than any other Massachusetts
university.
Bombs? Away.
Suicide bombers kill by stealth and surprise. But
what if a suicide bomber could be spotted from a distance of, say,
150 feet?
It could make all the difference.
Michael Silevitch and Carey Rappaport are working
on a suicide-bomber detection system they hope will someday save
many lives. The Gordon Center’s director and associate director,
respectively, are coprincipal investigators for the project, undertaken
with colleagues at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, American
Science and Engineering, Siemens, Raytheon, and Personal Protection
Technologies, with funding from the U.S. Department of Homeland
Security.
Silevitch says the system could make the danger
posed by roadside bombs, bombs left in unattended packages, and
suicide bombers “a thing of the past.”
“The idea is to detect something from a safe
range,” explains Rappaport. “In a sense, we’re
talking about X-ray vision like Superman had, where we can take
ghostly images of what lies beneath clothes or a backpack and see
it clearly.”
Such a system could be used in trouble spots around
the world. U.S. officials might want to use it along parade routes,
at stadiums, or at other venues that attract large crowds.
Creating a system that isn’t triggered by
false alarms is a challenge, Silevitch and Rappaport say. It must
be sensitive enough to detect explosives yet be able to differentiate
them from such objects as laptops and cell phones.
How will it work? “There is no one silver
bullet,” says Silevitch. “We will be trying to develop
multiple sensors to identify potentially threatening signatures.
Using different types of sensors provides a double check. And the
system will combine computer sensors with a human in a command center
who can evaluate all the information.”
— Karen Feldscher
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